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Five Chosen For
Model UN Meet
For the first time, Beadle will participate in a model United Nations conference, one of several that is being
sponsored across the United States.
This particular one is Nebraska Wesleyan University, at Lincoln, Nebraska, March 28-30. A faculty committee
of Dr. Ernest Teagarden, Mr. John
Haake, Mr. Robert Hermann and Mr.
Jack Quilico made the selections of
the final delegation from the applications submitted.
Those attending will be Kathleen
Boyum, LeeAnn Tjarks, James Kilcoin, Dean Rook and Patrick Mullen,
Madison. Elmer Lovrien was selected
as alternate.
In talking with Mr. Quilico, he expressed his joy that the college is involving itself in such an educational
process as this conference represents.
In the community and in the classroom, we often times speak of the
U.N.,- it's specialized agencies, its
functions, and it's victories and defeats, but all we can do is view it
from what someone else has written
about it. Aside from actually becoming apart of the U.S. mission to the
U.N. or part of the secretary of force
perhaps the next best way of involving
ourselves in a better understanding of
what the U.N. is and what it is not,
is by participating in such a conference as this.
The country that the delegation will
represent is the Middle East - Asian
nation of Jodan. In making this representation it will be the task of the
delegates to so completely immerse
themselves in Jordanian history and
culture, that the only thing they will
not be able to do is representing the
country in the General Assembly is to
speak Arabic.
To represent the country the delegates will have to completely divorce
themselves from their past upbringing to view all problems and events
from not only an Arabic view in general, but a Jordanian view in particular.
Mr. Quilico is quite certain that the
faculty and student body will be quite
satisfied with the representation that
these people make in the name of the
college.
Notice
DEADLINE FOR THE NEXT
EASTERN: ALL STORIES MUST BE
IN NO LATER THAN FEBRUARY
16.
The
Eastern
VOL 48
MADISON, SOUTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, FEB. 13, 1968
NO. 7
Stuart Myers, left, Apco manager,
presents Larry Stuefen with check in
full payment of a semester's tuition
at General Beadle State College.
Apco Sponsors
Full Semester
Scholarship
The name of Larry Stuefen, Brookings, was drawn in the Myers' Apco
Scholarship Drawing held recently at
the Apco service Station. The drawing,
made available to all General Beadle
students, was for a full-tuition semester scholarship.
Stuart Myers, station manager, Jerry Lawrence, district manager of the
Warrior Oil Co., and Milo E. Natwick,
Director of Institutional Development
at the college, were on hand for the
drawing.
Mr. Stuefen is a sophomore business major at General Beadle.
Snow Week Festivities Underway
Hectic Snow Week activities planned
by the Interdorm Council at General
Beadle State College began Monday
evening with campus organizations
creating competitive snow sculptures.
Students also voted in a preliminary
election for the 1968 Sweethearts of
the Snow.
The week's activities include a sock
hop Tuesday evening, broom hockey
and games Wednesday and a variety
show Thursday evening.
Snow sculpture judging Friday concludes Snow Week. The organization
compiling the most points receives
the traveling trophy at the Sweetheart
Ball. Sweethearts of the Snow will
then be disclosed.
Snow sculptures will be judged in
Humorous and Beautiful categories
Organizations entering a sculpture
organization entering a sculpture
must indicate whether it is Beautiful
or Humorous. Entry deadline is 1 p.m.
Friday. Entries must be submitted
to Miss DeForest's office, located on
second floor, Kennedy Hall.
Monday
Begin work on snow sculptures. Preliminary voting for King and Queen.
Hot chocolate in T.C. after sculpturing.
Tuesday
Basketball game with Dordt followed
by sock hop.
Wednesday
Ice games.
Thursday
Variety Show in Kennedy Auditorium.
Friday
Snow sculptures judged. Prize winners of Snow Week will be awarded
the traveling trophy and the King and
Queen will be crowned at the Sweetheart Ball Friday evening.
NOTICE
Search Begins for
Campus Cover Girl
The question of who drew the Trojan which appeared in the December
19, 1967 paper has been answered. We
would like to thank Georgia Versteeg
for her work of art.
The search for General Beadle's
representative in Picture Magazine's
1968 Campus Cover Girl Contest is
now underway. The Eastern is once
again sponsoring the annual contest.
Any girl now enrolled at General
Beadle is eligible to enter. To enter,
simply submit a billfold size picture
GB Welcomes
New Professors
Several new members have been
added to the GBSC faculty for the
second semester.
Tom Issenhuth, a Madison lawyer,
has taken over several of Dr. E.
Preuss business courses, as a result
of Preuss' hospitalization. Issenhuth
received his B.S. degree from the
University of Nebraska and his law
degree from the University of South
Dakota.
Even though Dr. Preuss is hospitalized, he still teaches his French and
German classes. A classroom was
prepared for him in the basement
of Madison Community Hospital in
which Preuss teaches German. He
instructs his French classes by means
of an intercom system set up from
his hospital room to 105 East Hall by
the Bell Telephone Company.
Another new member of the GBSC
staff, Mr. Gordon Leidahl, Sioux Center, Iowa, is graduated from Augustana College and did graduate work
at the University of Nebraska. He
will teach general biology and parisitology.
Joining the college faculty as a supervisor to student teachers is Marland Erickson. Erickson received his
M.A. from the University of South
Dakota. He is a 1962 graduate of
General Beadle and a native of Howard.
Kenneth Wood will be the new assistant librarian beginning March 25.
Wood is a graduate of the University
of Colorado and is from Kansas City,
Mo.
Planning Begins for
Miss GB Pageant
Plans are now being formulated for
the third annual Miss General Beadle
Pageant to be staged April 27 in
Kennedy Hall Auditorium. The pageant is being organized and sponsored by the Miss General Beadle
Pageant Committee.
Headed by Jim Treloar, general
chairman, this year's committee consits of Joel Joregensen, production
director; Gary Nyland, technical director; Nancy Wheeler, judges chairman; Connie Prouty, stage manager;
Linda Hotvet, official hostess; Gary
Robinson, preliminaries and scholarship chairman; Dianna Hummel, entrees chairman; Jean Lorang,
awards chairman, and Gay Lynn
Continued on Tage Two
of a girl friend, roommate, or
yourself to the Eastern office, located
downstairs in the Trojan Center. Entry deadline for the contest is Wednesday, February 21.
Entrants must be single and be residents of South Dakota, North Dakota,
Minnesota or Wisconsin. Basis for
judging will be on photogenic beauty
alone, Popularity, personality, or
scholarship should not enter into the
selection of the winner.
The preliminary judging will be
done by a panel of faculty members
and students from the college. Announcement of the six finalists will
be made in the February 26 issue of
the Eastern.
Selection of the 1968 General Beadle
Campus Cover Girl will be made by
the vote of the student body. The
Cover Girl Contest winner will then
be pictured in the March 11 issue of
the Eastern and will be entered in
the Minneapolis Tribune Picture
Magazine Cover Girl Contest to be
held later this spring.
Casey, Peterson
Hold Leads In
Spring Musical
''110 in the Shade", the Broadway
musical hit, is the main attraction in
General Beadle State College music
and drama department's spring
semester program. The musical, which
went into rehearsal February 1, will
be presented, April 3-6 in Kennedy
Auditorium.
Written and composed by the same
creators of "The Fantasticks", Harvey Schmidt and Tom Jones, "110 in
the Shade" was adapted from the
popular drama, "The Rain Maker".
It racked up records in its two year
New York run, and the musical was
considered to be "one of the most
exhilarating musicals ever written".
Ray Peterson will play the male
lead, Bill Starbuck, the professional
rain maker; Kathy Casey will interpret the female lead, Lizzie Curry,
who falls in love with Starbuck; Wallace Shea will recreate the role of Lizzie's father, H.C. Curry. Tom Blair
will portray the role of the opinionated
and self-righteous, Noah Curry; and
Dennis Ziebarth will play the role of
File, the intelligent and reticent
sheriff.
Donna Frick and Terry Fosland will
portray the comic roles of Snookie
Updeegraff and Jimmy Curry.
A large cast of townspeople will sing
and dance through one of Broadway's
most memorable stories.
Songs range from the hilarious "Little Red,Hat" to the haunting "Love
Don't Turn Away" and the tender "A
Man and A Woman".
Director is James L. Johnson. Robert Clausen is designing the numerous
sets. S.K. Lotspeich is musical director, John Kearns is staging the dances,
and Dr. Merrill Brown is directing
the orchestra.

The work from which this copy was made did not include a formal copyright notice. This work may be protected by U.S. copyright law (Title 17, United States Code), which governs reproduction, distribution, public display, and other uses of protected works. Some uses may be legal with permission from the copyright holder, if the copyright on the work has expired, or if the use is fair use or within another legal exemption. The user of DLSD material and content, whether utilized under fair use or used with written permission to publish, must name the University Archives, Karl Mundt Library, Dakota State University as the original source for the material.

The work from which this copy was made did not include a formal copyright notice. This work may be protected by U.S. copyright law (Title 17, United States Code), which governs reproduction, distribution, public display, and other uses of protected works. Some uses may be legal with permission from the copyright holder, if the copyright on the work has expired, or if the use is fair use or within another legal exemption. The user of DLSD material and content, whether utilized under fair use or used with written permission to publish, must name the University Archives, Karl Mundt Library, Dakota State University as the original source for the material.

Transcript

Five Chosen For
Model UN Meet
For the first time, Beadle will participate in a model United Nations conference, one of several that is being
sponsored across the United States.
This particular one is Nebraska Wesleyan University, at Lincoln, Nebraska, March 28-30. A faculty committee
of Dr. Ernest Teagarden, Mr. John
Haake, Mr. Robert Hermann and Mr.
Jack Quilico made the selections of
the final delegation from the applications submitted.
Those attending will be Kathleen
Boyum, LeeAnn Tjarks, James Kilcoin, Dean Rook and Patrick Mullen,
Madison. Elmer Lovrien was selected
as alternate.
In talking with Mr. Quilico, he expressed his joy that the college is involving itself in such an educational
process as this conference represents.
In the community and in the classroom, we often times speak of the
U.N.,- it's specialized agencies, its
functions, and it's victories and defeats, but all we can do is view it
from what someone else has written
about it. Aside from actually becoming apart of the U.S. mission to the
U.N. or part of the secretary of force
perhaps the next best way of involving
ourselves in a better understanding of
what the U.N. is and what it is not,
is by participating in such a conference as this.
The country that the delegation will
represent is the Middle East - Asian
nation of Jodan. In making this representation it will be the task of the
delegates to so completely immerse
themselves in Jordanian history and
culture, that the only thing they will
not be able to do is representing the
country in the General Assembly is to
speak Arabic.
To represent the country the delegates will have to completely divorce
themselves from their past upbringing to view all problems and events
from not only an Arabic view in general, but a Jordanian view in particular.
Mr. Quilico is quite certain that the
faculty and student body will be quite
satisfied with the representation that
these people make in the name of the
college.
Notice
DEADLINE FOR THE NEXT
EASTERN: ALL STORIES MUST BE
IN NO LATER THAN FEBRUARY
16.
The
Eastern
VOL 48
MADISON, SOUTH DAKOTA, TUESDAY, FEB. 13, 1968
NO. 7
Stuart Myers, left, Apco manager,
presents Larry Stuefen with check in
full payment of a semester's tuition
at General Beadle State College.
Apco Sponsors
Full Semester
Scholarship
The name of Larry Stuefen, Brookings, was drawn in the Myers' Apco
Scholarship Drawing held recently at
the Apco service Station. The drawing,
made available to all General Beadle
students, was for a full-tuition semester scholarship.
Stuart Myers, station manager, Jerry Lawrence, district manager of the
Warrior Oil Co., and Milo E. Natwick,
Director of Institutional Development
at the college, were on hand for the
drawing.
Mr. Stuefen is a sophomore business major at General Beadle.
Snow Week Festivities Underway
Hectic Snow Week activities planned
by the Interdorm Council at General
Beadle State College began Monday
evening with campus organizations
creating competitive snow sculptures.
Students also voted in a preliminary
election for the 1968 Sweethearts of
the Snow.
The week's activities include a sock
hop Tuesday evening, broom hockey
and games Wednesday and a variety
show Thursday evening.
Snow sculpture judging Friday concludes Snow Week. The organization
compiling the most points receives
the traveling trophy at the Sweetheart
Ball. Sweethearts of the Snow will
then be disclosed.
Snow sculptures will be judged in
Humorous and Beautiful categories
Organizations entering a sculpture
organization entering a sculpture
must indicate whether it is Beautiful
or Humorous. Entry deadline is 1 p.m.
Friday. Entries must be submitted
to Miss DeForest's office, located on
second floor, Kennedy Hall.
Monday
Begin work on snow sculptures. Preliminary voting for King and Queen.
Hot chocolate in T.C. after sculpturing.
Tuesday
Basketball game with Dordt followed
by sock hop.
Wednesday
Ice games.
Thursday
Variety Show in Kennedy Auditorium.
Friday
Snow sculptures judged. Prize winners of Snow Week will be awarded
the traveling trophy and the King and
Queen will be crowned at the Sweetheart Ball Friday evening.
NOTICE
Search Begins for
Campus Cover Girl
The question of who drew the Trojan which appeared in the December
19, 1967 paper has been answered. We
would like to thank Georgia Versteeg
for her work of art.
The search for General Beadle's
representative in Picture Magazine's
1968 Campus Cover Girl Contest is
now underway. The Eastern is once
again sponsoring the annual contest.
Any girl now enrolled at General
Beadle is eligible to enter. To enter,
simply submit a billfold size picture
GB Welcomes
New Professors
Several new members have been
added to the GBSC faculty for the
second semester.
Tom Issenhuth, a Madison lawyer,
has taken over several of Dr. E.
Preuss business courses, as a result
of Preuss' hospitalization. Issenhuth
received his B.S. degree from the
University of Nebraska and his law
degree from the University of South
Dakota.
Even though Dr. Preuss is hospitalized, he still teaches his French and
German classes. A classroom was
prepared for him in the basement
of Madison Community Hospital in
which Preuss teaches German. He
instructs his French classes by means
of an intercom system set up from
his hospital room to 105 East Hall by
the Bell Telephone Company.
Another new member of the GBSC
staff, Mr. Gordon Leidahl, Sioux Center, Iowa, is graduated from Augustana College and did graduate work
at the University of Nebraska. He
will teach general biology and parisitology.
Joining the college faculty as a supervisor to student teachers is Marland Erickson. Erickson received his
M.A. from the University of South
Dakota. He is a 1962 graduate of
General Beadle and a native of Howard.
Kenneth Wood will be the new assistant librarian beginning March 25.
Wood is a graduate of the University
of Colorado and is from Kansas City,
Mo.
Planning Begins for
Miss GB Pageant
Plans are now being formulated for
the third annual Miss General Beadle
Pageant to be staged April 27 in
Kennedy Hall Auditorium. The pageant is being organized and sponsored by the Miss General Beadle
Pageant Committee.
Headed by Jim Treloar, general
chairman, this year's committee consits of Joel Joregensen, production
director; Gary Nyland, technical director; Nancy Wheeler, judges chairman; Connie Prouty, stage manager;
Linda Hotvet, official hostess; Gary
Robinson, preliminaries and scholarship chairman; Dianna Hummel, entrees chairman; Jean Lorang,
awards chairman, and Gay Lynn
Continued on Tage Two
of a girl friend, roommate, or
yourself to the Eastern office, located
downstairs in the Trojan Center. Entry deadline for the contest is Wednesday, February 21.
Entrants must be single and be residents of South Dakota, North Dakota,
Minnesota or Wisconsin. Basis for
judging will be on photogenic beauty
alone, Popularity, personality, or
scholarship should not enter into the
selection of the winner.
The preliminary judging will be
done by a panel of faculty members
and students from the college. Announcement of the six finalists will
be made in the February 26 issue of
the Eastern.
Selection of the 1968 General Beadle
Campus Cover Girl will be made by
the vote of the student body. The
Cover Girl Contest winner will then
be pictured in the March 11 issue of
the Eastern and will be entered in
the Minneapolis Tribune Picture
Magazine Cover Girl Contest to be
held later this spring.
Casey, Peterson
Hold Leads In
Spring Musical
''110 in the Shade", the Broadway
musical hit, is the main attraction in
General Beadle State College music
and drama department's spring
semester program. The musical, which
went into rehearsal February 1, will
be presented, April 3-6 in Kennedy
Auditorium.
Written and composed by the same
creators of "The Fantasticks", Harvey Schmidt and Tom Jones, "110 in
the Shade" was adapted from the
popular drama, "The Rain Maker".
It racked up records in its two year
New York run, and the musical was
considered to be "one of the most
exhilarating musicals ever written".
Ray Peterson will play the male
lead, Bill Starbuck, the professional
rain maker; Kathy Casey will interpret the female lead, Lizzie Curry,
who falls in love with Starbuck; Wallace Shea will recreate the role of Lizzie's father, H.C. Curry. Tom Blair
will portray the role of the opinionated
and self-righteous, Noah Curry; and
Dennis Ziebarth will play the role of
File, the intelligent and reticent
sheriff.
Donna Frick and Terry Fosland will
portray the comic roles of Snookie
Updeegraff and Jimmy Curry.
A large cast of townspeople will sing
and dance through one of Broadway's
most memorable stories.
Songs range from the hilarious "Little Red,Hat" to the haunting "Love
Don't Turn Away" and the tender "A
Man and A Woman".
Director is James L. Johnson. Robert Clausen is designing the numerous
sets. S.K. Lotspeich is musical director, John Kearns is staging the dances,
and Dr. Merrill Brown is directing
the orchestra.